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Trends in the Prevalence of Excess Dietary Sodium Intake — United States, 2003–2010
Excess sodium intake can lead to hypertension, the primary risk factor for cardiovascular disease, which is the leading cause of U.S. deaths (1). Monitoring the prevalence of excess sodium intake is essential to provide the evidence for public health interventions and to track reductions in sodium intake, yet few reports exist. Reducing population sodium intake is a national priority, and monitoring the amount of sodium consumed adjusted for energy intake (sodium density or sodium in milligrams divided by calories) has been recommended because a higher sodium intake is generally accompanied by a higher calorie intake from food (2). To describe the most recent estimates and trends in excess sodium intake, CDC analyzed 2003–2010 data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) of 34,916 participants aged =1 year. During 2007–2010, the prevalence of excess sodium intake, defined as intake above the Institute of Medicine tolerable upper intake levels (1,500 mg/day at ages 1–3 years; 1,900 mg at 4–8 years; 2,200 mg at 9–13 years; and 2,300 mg at =14 years) (3), ranged by age group from 79.1% to 95.4%. Small declines in the prevalence of excess sodium intake occurred during 2003–2010 in children aged 1–13 years, but not in adolescents or adults. Mean sodium intake declined slightly among persons aged =1 year, whereas sodium density did not. Despite slight declines in some groups, the majority of the U.S. population aged =1 year consumes excess sodium.
NHANES is a nationally representative, multistage survey of the noninstitutionalized U.S. civilian population. Certain populations are oversampled to allow for reliable estimates within subgroups.* During NHANES 2003–2010, a total of 49,731 participants aged =1 year (including those currently breastfed) were screened. Participants who completed an initial in-person dietary recall in a mobile examination center were asked to complete a second 24-hour dietary recall by telephone 3–10 days later. After those with missing or incomplete dietary recall data were excluded, the final analytic sample was 34,916, for a response rate of 70.3% among those screened. The 24-hour dietary recall was collected by trained interviewers using the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) automated multiple-pass method† by proxy for those aged 1–5 years, by participants with proxy assistance for those aged 6–11 years, and directly by participants aged =12 years. The nutrient values of sodium were assigned to foods and beverages using the USDA Food and Nutrient Database for Dietary Studies corresponding with each NHANES 2-year cycle.§ Sodium intake for each respondent on each recall day was estimated by summing the sodium consumed from each food and beverage during the previous 24 hours (excluding supplements, antacids, and salt added at the table). To evaluate trends, from 2003–2010, estimates of sodium in foods did not include salt adjustments for participants whose household used salt in cooking occasionally or less often.¶ For children consuming human milk, the sodium content was estimated and added to sodium from other foods and beverages.**
Up to two 24-hour dietary recalls were used. Data were analyzed with statistical software that fits a measurement error model.†† All estimates were based on usual sodium intake, adjusting for within person, day-to-day variability. After adjusting for the day of the week of the recall, age (years), sex, and race/ethnicity, estimates were calculated for mean usual sodium intake, sodium density, and prevalence of excess sodium intake. Jackknife replicate weights based on survey weights were used to estimate standard errors and account for the complex survey design. The differences in the prevalence of excess sodium intake were examined by z test. Using linear regression models with the usual mean intake for each 2-year phase weighted by the inverse of the variance, trends in sodium intake and sodium intake density were examined using a z test. A p-value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant. No adjustment was made for multiple testing.
During 2007–2010, the prevalence of excess usual sodium intake ranged from 79.1% for U.S. children aged 1–3 years to 95.4% for U.S. adults aged 19–50 years (Table 1). A statistically significant 2.7–4.9 percentage point decline in excess usual sodium intake occurred from 2003–2006 to 2007–2010 among children aged 1–3, 4–8, and 9–13 years, but not among adolescents or adults. Among children aged 4–8 years, statistically significant declines occurred across all sex and race/ethnicity subgroups.
Mean usual sodium intake among the U.S. population aged =1 year decreased slightly from 2003–2004 to 2009–2010 (3,518 mg versus 3,424 mg; p-value for trend = 0.037). The U.S. population aged =1 year consumed, on average, approximately 1,700 mg sodium per 1,000 kcal during 2009–2010, with no significant trend over time compared with previous investigation years (Table 2). Across age groups, mean usual sodium density did not change significantly over time, with the exception of youths aged 14–18 years, for whom sodium density increased slightly. Within age groups, mean usual sodium density slightly increased among males aged 4–8 years and females aged 14–18 years and slightly declined among non-Hispanic whites aged =51 years.
Reported by
Alicia Carriquiry, PhD, Iowa State Univ. Alanna J. Moshfegh, MS, Lois C. Steinfeldt, MPH, Food Surveys Research Group, Beltsville Human Nutrition Research Center, Agricultural Research Svc, US Dept of Agriculture. Mary E. Cogswell, DrPH, Fleetwood Loustalot, PhD, Zefeng Zhang, MD, PhD, Quanhe Yang, PhD, Div for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion; Niu Tian, MD, PhD, EIS Officer, CDC. Corresponding contributor: Niu Tian, vii9@cdc.gov, 770-488-5679.
Editorial Note
The findings in this report indicate that during 2007–2010, approximately eight out of 10 U.S. children aged 1–3 years and nine out of 10 U.S. residents aged =4 years were at potential risk for high blood pressure attributable to excess sodium intake. Although a slight decrease in the prevalence of excess usual sodium intake occurred after 2003–2006 among children aged 1–13 years, excess intake did not decrease among adolescents and adults. During 2003–2010, a slight decrease occurred in average population sodium intake, but not sodium intake per calorie. Although some variation in trends occurred among population subgroups in usual mean sodium intake and sodium density, the lack of a change in sodium consumed per calorie (approximately 1,700 mg/1,000 kcal) suggests that the small reduction in usual sodium intake might be related to declines in calorie consumption, rather than to changes in sodium density of foods.
Previous reports (4,5) included data on trends in U.S. sodium intake from the 1970s to 2003. The findings in this report update these trends, and include new data on usual excess sodium intake and sodium density. The slight declines in excess usual sodium intake among children aged 1–13 years might be partially explained by declines in energy intake among children over the same period.§§ Given an average sodium consumption of 1,700 mg/1,000 kcal/day, reducing 100 calories per day could result in a mean reduction of 170 mg of sodium per day, slightly shifting the distribution of sodium intake and lowering the percentage of those with excess intake. Among adults, the pattern of trends in sodium intake also might be explained by changes in energy intake over time. Although average energy intake declined slightly during 1999–2010 among adults aged 20–39 years, it did not change among older adults (6).
The findings in this report are subject to at least four limitations. First, NHANES data exclude military personnel and institutionalized populations such as persons who reside in long-term care or correctional facilities. Second, the response rate was 70.3%; lower response rates can result in response bias. Third, the 24-hour dietary recall underestimates mean caloric intake by an estimated 11% and sodium intake by 9%, and sodium intake excluded use of salt at the table, which accounts for nearly 5% of U.S. sodium intake (7). Finally, no adjustments for multiple comparisons were performed to determine whether differences between any pair of estimates were statistically significant.
Despite slight declines in sodium intake among some population groups, most U.S. residents aged =1 year consume excess sodium. Given consumption of approximately 1,700 mg of sodium per 1,000 kilocalories/day, a mean energy reduction of approximately 600 kcal/day would be required to reduce mean sodium intake by approximately 1,000 mg, to approximately 2,300 mg/day. A sodium density target of 1,000 mg/1,000 kcal was recently proposed to lower sodium intake to <2,300 mg per day (2). Given that average energy and sodium intakes have changed little over time, coupling efforts to reduce obesity with efforts to reduce the sodium content per calorie in foods might accelerate progress. Considering that 8.1% of sodium intake among U.S. children comes from school meals (8), new school food guidelines might promote progress toward achieving goals for reducing sodium consumption among children who obtain meals at school.¶¶ Other ongoing public health efforts include working with industry to gradually reduce sodium in commercially processed packaged and restaurant foods.*** Even a 400 mg reduction in mean U.S. sodium intake might save billions of health-care dollars (9).
References
Roger VL, Go AS, Lloyd-Jones DM, et al. Heart disease and stroke statistics—2012 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation 2012;125:e2–220.
Guenther PM, Lyon JM, Appel LJ. Modeling dietary patterns to assess sodium recommendations for nutrient adequacy. Am J Clin Nutr 2013;97:842–7.
Bernstein AM, Willett WC. Trends in 24-h urinary sodium excretion in the United States, 1957–2003: a systematic review. Am J Clin Nutr 2010;92:1172–80.
Briefel RR, Johnson CL. Secular trends in dietary intake in the United States. Annu Rev Nutr 2004;24:401–31.
Ford ES, Dietz WH. Trends in energy intake among adults in the United States: findings from NHANES. Am J Clin Nutr 2013;97:848–53.
Rhodes DG, Murayi T, Clemens JC, et al. The USDA automated multiple-pass method accurately assesses population sodium intakes. Am J Clin Nutr 2013;97:958–64.
Coxson PG, Cook NR, Joffres M, et al. Mortality benefits from US population-wide reduction in sodium consumption: projections from 3 modeling approaches. Hypertension 2013;61:564–70.
** The volume of human milk was assumed to be 600 mL per day for children aged 7–11 months fed only human milk; 600 mL per day minus the volume of infant formula plus other milk for other children aged 7–11 months, 89 mL per human milk feeding for children aged 12–18 months, and 59 mL per feeding for children aged 19–36 months. Sodium, potassium, and energy concentrations in human milk were assumed to be 177 mg/L, 531 mg/L, and 75 kcal/L, respectively, based on the USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference values for mature, human milk, 33.8 fluid ounces per liter.
Excess sodium intake can lead to hypertension and consequent cardiovascular disease. Sodium consumption in the United States is well above national recommendations. Reports of national data on sodium consumption trends are limited.
What is added by this report?
As of 2010, >90% of U.S. adolescents and adults consume sodium in excess of recommendations, and little has changed since 2003. U.S. children have seen a slight decline in excess sodium consumption during the same period, but 80%–90% of children continue to consume excess sodium. From 2003 to 2010, a slight decrease occurred in average sodium intake, but not sodium intake per calorie.
What are the implications for public health practice?
Small reductions in sodium intake might be related to declines in average energy consumption, rather than changes in the amount of sodium per calorie in foods consumed. Given that average energy and sodium intakes have changed little over time, coupling efforts to reduce obesity with efforts to reduce the sodium content per calorie in foods might accelerate reductions in sodium consumed.
TABLE 1. Proportion of usual sodium intake exceeding the Institute of Medicine tolerable upper intake level,* by age group, sex, and race/ethnicity† — National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), United States, 2003–2010
Characteristic
Upper limit
(mg/day)
2003–2006
2007–2010
Percentage point change
p-value
No.§
Proportion over upper intake level (%)
Standard error
No.
Proportion over upper intake level (%)
Standard error
Age 1–3 yrs
1,500
1,560
(84.0)
1.4
1,558
(79.1)
1.9
(-4.9)
0.019¶
Male
784
(84.1)
2.0
809
(79.4)
2.7
(-4.7)
0.081
Female
776
(84.3)
2.2
749
(79.7)
2.2
(-4.6)
0.071
White, non-Hispanic
470
(84.0)
2.9
525
(80.3)
3.7
(-3.7)
0.215
Black, non-Hispanic
407
(87.6)
3.3
297
(86.3)
3.0
(-1.3)
0.385
Mexican-American
519
(75.7)
3.2
437
(71.2)
4.9
(-4.5)
0.222
Age 4–8 yrs
1,900
1,682
(97.3)
0.4
1,890
(92.6)
0.8
(-4.6)
<0.001¶
Male
815
(97.7)
0.5
995
(94.3)
1.0
(-3.4)
0.008¶
Female
867
(96.9)
0.8
895
(90.5)
1.4
(-6.3)
<0.001¶
White, non-Hispanic
479
(96.3)
0.8
621
(90.3)
1.5
(-5.9)
<0.001¶
Black, non-Hispanic
519
(98.9)
0.7
402
(95.6)
1.3
(-3.3)
0.012¶
Mexican-American
517
(94.2)
1.4
529
(89.3)
2.6
(-4.9)
0.045¶
Age 9–13 yrs
2,200
2,040
(96.9)
0.7
1,717
(94.2)
0.9
(-2.7)
0.008¶
Male
999
—**
—**
850
(96.8)
0.7
—††
—††
Female
1,041
(91.4)
1.6
867
(90.1)
1.7
(-1.4)
0.279
White, non-Hispanic
516
(97.0)
0.8
544
—**
—**
—††
—††
Black, non-Hispanic
691
—**
—**
406
—**
—**
—††
—††
Mexican-American
669
(95.4)
1.3
456
(84.8)
3.1
(-10.5)
0.001¶
Age 14–18 yrs
2,300
2,673
(94.2)
1.0
1,552
(92.3)
1.5
(-1.9)
0.145
Male
1,353
(97.8)
0.7
818
—**
—**
—††
—††
Female
1,320
(84.2)
2.3
734
(80.2)
3.1
(-4.0)
0.938
White, non-Hispanic
731
(95.7)
1.0
517
(93.4)
1.7
(-2.3)
0.123
Black, non-Hispanic
938
(90.7)
1.8
369
—**
—**
—††
—††
Mexican-American
820
(94.3)
1.3
385
(90.0)
2.2
(-4.3)
0.047¶
Age 19–50 yrs
2,300
5,428
(95.9)
0.4
6,086
(95.4)
0.5
(-0.5)
0.200
Male
2,528
(99.2)
0.1
2,936
(99.1)
0.2
(-0.1)
0.242
Female
2,900
(86.6)
1.2
3,150
(84.8)
1.4
(-1.9)
0.152
White, non-Hispanic
2,384
(97.1)
0.4
2,598
(96.4)
0.6
(-0.7)
0.170
Black, non-Hispanic
1,310
(92.5)
1.4
1,190
(93.4)
0.8
(0.9)
0.709
Mexican-American
1,276
(93.5)
1.0
1,270
(90.8)
1.3
(-2.8)
0.050
Age =51 yrs
2,300
4,062
(88.9)
1.0
4,668
(90.1)
0.8
(1.2)
0.839
Male
2,028
(95.9)
0.6
2,341
(96.5)
0.5
(0.6)
0.782
Female
2,034
(77.1)
1.4
2,327
(77.9)
1.4
(0.9)
0.668
White, non-Hispanic
2,416
(91.4)
0.9
2,273
(92.8)
0.8
(1.4)
0.876
Black, non-Hispanic
762
(79.0)
2.4
975
(82.2)
2.0
(3.2)
0.842
Mexican-American
674
(67.7)
3.9
757
(76.3)
3.1
(8.6)
0.959
* The upper intake level is the age-specific, tolerable upper intake level, as defined by the Institute of Medicine (2005). The proportion of usual sodium intake over the upper intake level was estimated using PC-SIDE software (Department of Statistics, Iowa State University) with jackknife replicate weights and adjusted for the day of the week of the recall, age (years), sex, and race/ethnicity. Persons missing data on incomplete first-day recall were excluded from the analysis.
† Other racial/ethnic groups were not included. The sum of the sample size of non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, and Mexican-American is not equal to the total sample size.
§ Sample sizes unweighted.
¶ p<0.05, when trends of proportion of usual sodium intake over the upper intake level were examined using the z test.
** Data statistically unreliable; relative standard error =0.3.
†† Not applicable.
TABLE 2. Mean usual sodium density* (mg/1,000 kcal), by age group, sex, and race/ethnicity† — National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), United States, 2003–2010
Characteristic
2003–2004
2005–2006
2007–2008
2009–2010
Changes per cycle¶
p-value for trend
No.§
Mean
Standard error
No.
Mean
Standard error
No.
Mean
Standard error
No.
Mean
Standard error
Overall
8,579
1,661
10
8,866
1,693
14
8,473
1,697
12
8,998
1,689
10
9
0.248
Male
4,192
1,653
9
4,315
1,666
14
4,266
1,695
15
4,483
1,690
14
14
0.054
Female
4,387
1,669
17
4,551
1,719
17
4,207
1,698
16
4,515
1,688
13
2
0.879
White, non-Hispanic
3,541
1,679
10
3,455
1,710
14
3,367
1,698
11
3,711
1,692
10
4
0.560
Black, non-Hispanic
2,284
1,617
26
2,343
1,637
14
1,939
1,664
21
1,700
1,632
17
5
0.652
Mexican-American
2,123
1,548
15
2,352
1,569
16
1,773
1,582
16
2,061
1,581
28
13
0.063
Age 1–3 yrs
740
1,431
21
820
1,458
34
765
1,429
23
793
1,427
15
-3
0.589
Male
363
1,404
32
421
1,472
46
399
1,392
34
410
1,419
25
0
0.993
Female
377
1,457
31
399
1,433
20
366
1,463
27
383
1,433
22
-3
0.727
White, non-Hispanic
226
1,435
25
244
1,472
36
246
1,399
36
279
1,434
34
-5
0.729
Black, non-Hispanic
218
1,500
30
189
1,464
34
163
1,497
29
134
1,479
75
-3
0.840
Mexican-American
228
1,364
49
291
1,343
31
207
1,368
46
230
1,360
47
3
0.695
Age 4–8 yrs
783
1,541
19
899
1,550
19
934
1,530
20
956
1,556
23
2
0.822
Male
382
1,491
20
433
1,531
21
500
1,544
31
495
1,573
41
27
0.028**
Female
401
1,594
29
466
1,567
28
434
1,518
24
461
1,541
21
-18
0.252
White, non-Hispanic
220
1,545
31
259
1,522
28
300
1,480
26
321
1,546
37
-7
0.747
Black, non-Hispanic
261
1,574
42
258
1,614
40
230
1,620
32
172
1,568
32
-3
0.840
Mexican-American
224
1,434
34
293
1,491
23
250
1,524
31
279
1,487
31
3
0.695
Age 9–13 yrs
995
1,601
23
1,045
1,633
16
832
1,637
32
885
1,636
19
9
0.292
Male
482
1,580
35
517
1,640
29
411
1,647
40
439
1,665
30
25
0.102
Female
513
1,622
34
528
1,627
39
421
1,625
45
446
1,613
27
-3
0.269
White, non-Hispanic
266
1,568
28
250
1,648
25
252
1,638
45
292
1,635
23
17
0.370
Black, non-Hispanic
350
1,750
58
341
1,685
39
224
1,722
48
182
1,599
30
-44
0.140
Mexican-American
301
1,520
45
368
1,613
27
206
1,514
64
250
1,598
38
12
0.700
Age 14–18 yrs
1,343
1,567
26
1,330
1,636
39
738
1,683
36
814
1,689
30
43
0.036**
Male
697
1,594
33
656
1,638
50
385
1,721
38
433
1,678
37
35
0.143
Female
646
1,535
31
674
1,625
36
353
1,644
36
381
1,698
37
54
0.036**
White, non-Hispanic
360
1,586
33
371
1,639
48
247
1,717
47
270
1,675
38
34
0.137
Black, non-Hispanic
488
1,542
42
450
1,531
27
195
1,594
50
174
1,609
25
27
0.137
Mexican-American
411
1,551
31
409
1,607
28
165
1,656
70
220
1,631
58
36
0.104
Age 19–50 yrs
2,583
1,657
17
2,845
1,717
20
2,865
1,718
14
3221
1,708
11
12
0.345
Male
1,226
1,651
21
1,302
1,687
22
1,404
1,712
15
1532
1,703
20
18
0.163
Female
1,357
1,660
25
1,543
1,742
29
1,461
1,723
22
1689
1,712
17
10
0.527
White, non-Hispanic
1,189
1,663
21
1,195
1,729
25
1,188
1,720
18
1410
1,709
15
11
0.432
Black, non-Hispanic
633
1,603
50
677
1,641
30
623
1,664
31
567
1,636
22
5
0.697
Mexican-American
560
1,578
17
716
1,598
25
598
1,602
15
672
1,601
30
9
0.113
Age =51 yrs
2,135
1,778
17
1,927
1,759
16
2,339
1,768
23
2,329
1,748
20
-8
0.159
Male
1,042
1,784
25
986
1,712
24
1,167
1,768
25
1,174
1,760
36
-3
0.904
Female
1,093
1,775
20
941
1,799
19
1,172
1,767
27
1,155
1,736
24
-15
0.290
White, non-Hispanic
1,280
1,799
18
1,136
1,771
17
1,134
1,752
17
1,139
1,738
25
-21
0.012**
Black, non-Hispanic
334
1,671
29
428
1,689
30
504
1,726
32
471
1,697
34
12
0.354
Mexican-American
399
1,637
45
275
1,567
47
347
1,657
42
410
1,631
31
4
0.809
* Sodium intake density was calculated as sodium intake divided by daily calories. Mean usual sodium intake density was estimated using PC-SIDE software (Department of Statistics, Iowa State University) with jackknife replicate weights and adjusted for the day of the week of the recall, age (years), sex, and race/ethnicity. Persons missing first-day recall data were excluded.
† Other racial/ethnic groups were not included. The sum of the sample size of non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, and Mexican-American is not equal to the total sample size.
§ Sample sizes are unweighted.
¶ Mean change in sodium density per 2-year cycle (mg/1,000 kcal) estimated from a linear regression model with the usual mean sodium density for each 2-year phase weighted by the inverse of the variance.
** p<0.05, when mean usual sodium intake density was examined by using linear regression model.